China’s first reusable rocket simply took an enormous step towards flight.
The Chinese language firm LandSpace performed a static-fire check with its chrome steel Zhuque-3 launcher on Monday (Oct. 20), preserving the rocket on monitor for a debut anticipated to happen earlier than the top of the yr.
The static fireplace — a typical prelaunch trial by which a rocket fires its engines whereas remaining anchored to the pad — capped the three-day “first part” of Zhuque-3’s maiden flight marketing campaign, in response to LandSpace.
That part additionally included a fueling check, which, just like the static fireplace, passed off within the Dongfeng Business House Innovation Pilot Zone in northwestern China.
“The vehicle will next proceed with planned vertical integration rehearsal, before returning to the technical zone for inspection and maintenance in preparation for its upcoming orbital launch and first-stage recovery,” LandSpace said via X on Monday.
Zhuque-3 appears loads like SpaceX’s workhorse Falcon 9 rocket, which additionally incorporates a reusable first stage and an expendable higher stage. Just like the Falcon 9, Zhuque-3’s booster is powered by 9 engines — on this case, Tianque-12As, which LandSpace developed in home.
The Tianque-12A employs liquid methane and liquid oxygen (LOX) propellants — a key distinction with the Falcon 9, whose Merlin engines burn LOX and rocket-grade kerosene. (SpaceX‘s next-gen Raptor engine, which powers its Starship megarocket, makes use of LOX and liquid methane.)
The 217-foot-tall (66 meters) Zhuque-3 can haul about 40,350 kilos (18,300 kilograms) to low Earth orbit (LEO). That is in roughly the identical ballpark because the Falcon 9, whose LEO payload capability is 50,265 kilos (22,800 kg).
Monday’s static fireplace was the most recent in a sequence of serious milestones for the Zhuque-3. For instance, LandSpace carried out low-altitude launch and touchdown assessments with the car final yr, and it performed a static fireplace this previous June.
Beijing-based LandSpace, which was based in 2015, additionally flies the expendable Zhuque-2. In July 2023, that rocket grew to become the primary LOX-methane car to succeed in Earth orbit. That debut kicked off a string of 4 consecutive successes for Zhuque-2, however the rocket failed on its most up-to-date liftoff this previous August.